You’re Probably Using AI the Wrong Way (And Why That Matters for Local Businesses)

After spending several days speaking at DigiMarCon, Dennis Yu and Sam McLeod noticed the same issue coming up again and again with business owners, agency leaders, and local service professionals.

Most people in the room were already using AI tools. Very few felt confident that those tools were actually helping their business.

The issue wasn’t access. It was approach.

Why Some People Get Better Results from AI

During the event, Dennis Yu shared an observation based on how he personally uses ChatGPT.

He pointed out that people who take the time to communicate clearly — even using simple phrases like “please” and “thank you” — tend to get better responses. Not because the tool needs politeness, but because those users are more likely to slow down and explain the task properly.

Dennis explained that the quality of the output often mirrors the quality of the input. When users describe what they’re trying to accomplish and react to the response the way they would with a real assistant, the results improve.

That same pattern showed up repeatedly in conversations with agency owners and local service businesses at DigiMarCon. The people getting usable output weren’t typing one-line prompts. They were giving context and treating the interaction like an ongoing task.

The Common Mistake Most Business Owners Make

Throughout their sessions, Dennis and Sam McLeod kept seeing the same habit.

Most people were using ChatGPT the way they use Google. Ask a question. Read the answer. Move on.

Dennis explained that this limits the value of the tool. He emphasized that many users rely on AI to produce information, when it becomes far more useful when asked to process work.

That idea clicked once Sam started walking through how they use Agent Mode in real situations.

Repurposing Existing Content

Sam McLeod demonstrated how a single piece of content can be reused instead of rewritten.

Using Agent Mode, they showed how an existing video or long-form asset can be reused instead of rewritten, using the same repurposing process they follow inside The Content Factory.

  • Create multiple blog posts
  • Adapt messaging for Facebook ads
  • Rewrite versions suitable for Google ads

The point wasn’t producing more content for the sake of it. It was helping local service businesses get more value from content they already have.

Improving Paid Advertising

Dennis Yu also walked through how they review ad copy using AI.

Rather than guessing what needs to change, they ask AI to:

  • Look at an ad from the perspective of someone unfamiliar with the business
  • Check whether the message reflects the company’s reputation
  • Suggest small adjustments instead of full rewrites

This approach helps businesses refine ads without constantly starting over.

Handling Routine Tasks

They also showed examples of AI assisting with everyday tasks that often get pushed aside, including:

  • Drafting email responses
  • Answering common customer questions
  • Handling repetitive work that doesn’t require strategic thinking

These weren’t framed as experiments. They were shown as normal parts of the workflow.

Why the Atlas Browser Changes the Workflow

Sam also introduced ChatGPT’s Atlas browser during the session.

Instead of copying information between tools, Atlas allows AI to move through steps on its own. They demonstrated how this makes it easier to:

  • Review existing content
  • Navigate pages
  • Complete basic tasks with fewer interruptions

For many of the local service business owners in the room, this was the first time they had seen AI used to complete actions instead of just returning answers.

Treating AI Like a Teammate

One theme that came up repeatedly in Dennis and Sam’s sessions was how people give instructions.

When users clearly explained what they wanted done, why it mattered, and what “good” looked like, the results were noticeably better. When prompts were rushed or vague, the output usually missed the mark.

Dennis made the point that this isn’t about learning prompts or tricks. It’s about explaining work the same way you would if you were delegating it to another person on your team.

The Bigger Goal Behind the Work

Dennis emphasized that the real goal is helping local businesses control their marketing and build trust.

Most local service businesses already have a strong reputation in their community. The problem is that their marketing doesn’t always reflect that reputation, or it’s handled by someone else who doesn’t understand the business.

Dennis explained that AI makes it easier for business owners to keep marketing in-house, understand what’s being done, and tie everything back to trust and credibility instead of gimmicks.

He also mentioned training a young adult from the local community to handle marketing tasks, so business owners aren’t forced to outsource work they don’t fully see or control.

Where to Begin

For business owners unsure where to start, Dennis and Sam suggested beginning with work you already have.

Take content you’ve already created—reviews, photos, videos, customer stories, past posts—and focus on processing that material instead of trying to invent something new. That’s where AI becomes useful, because it helps organize, repurpose, and publish what already represents your reputation.

If you want help setting this up properly, this is exactly what Local Service Spotlight is built for. Through the Reputation MRI and Content Factory system, local service businesses turn their existing proof into blogs, social posts, videos, and structured content that builds trust and visibility over time.

Instead of guessing what to post or experimenting with tools on your own, you can get started with a Reputation MRI to see where your marketing stands today, then use the same repurposing workflows Dennis and Sam demonstrated to consistently publish content tied to your reputation.

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